Needless to say there was a brief moment of panic at the smell of smoke, but years of electrical experiments led me to recognize the distinct smell of "magic" electrical smoke and calmed everyone down saying that it was probably just a component blown in an electronic device.
I started to take mental inventory of what I thought could go wrong and what was indeed wrong. I have installed many home automation / av systems spanning almost 15 years and learned long ago to install a whole house Surge Suppressor http://amzn.com/B00081K55Q everywhere I go. Other than the a temporary (I thought) knock-out of the Roku nothing else seemed awry.
I assumed we would survive the experience unscathed, but the lingering smell of burnt capacitors was telling me otherwise. I headed to my AV closet where I then saw my Ubuntu Server Monitor with a "disconnected icon" on the tray indicating something terrible has happened with my wired network. I glanced at my primary gigabit switch and found the link lights pulsating with weird levels of intensity that I had never seen before indicating this one has seen its last days. Following the path I looked at the Asus RTN-16 router no longer indicated any ethernet link lights. Going a little further noticed the Timer Warner Ubee modem was completely dark without a single glowing indicator of life and a faint trail of smoke rising from its vent. Overall, I was surprised to see that the surge could travel from the Coax into and across my CAT5 network destroying everything in its path.
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I re-ran a new RG6 line from the service panel into my electrical closet, bought a new cable modem, replaced the switches and router, however, the signal strength isnt good enough to link up now. This is indicating to me that something may have happened beyond the service box on my house. Feeling defeated I called TW for a service appointment which by now is already booked out till Sunday evening.
It made me realize just how much of our life was on the cloud now: No Internet, No VoIP home phone, No Streaming TV service, No Movies, No Music, and No online gaming. At least our board and card games still work ;)